Strong partnership needed to tackle modern slavery, trafficking

ĐÀ NẴNG — Strong partnership and multi-agency efforts were vital for success in the fight against modern slavery and human trafficking, a conference that opened in central Đà Nẵng City heard on Wednesday.

Ideas were discussed at the two-day event for increased collaborative working across borders.

Modern slavery and human trafficking have serious transnational repercussions. They are crimes not restricted by borders, with perpetrators preying on those most vulnerable in societies, experts said at the workshop. Therefore, it required both a domestic and international response.

The conference, organised by the British Embassy, in collaboration with the United Nations Action for Co-operation Against Trafficking in Persons (UN-ACT), explored opportunities to further enhance co-operation between the United Kingdom and Việt Nam in the fight against modern slavery and human trafficking.

David Pennant, UK Home Office senior responsible officer for Việt Nam, said the conference brought together modern slavery and human trafficking experts from the United Kingdom to promote the definition of modern slavery, introduce the United Kingdom’s world-leading Modern Slavery Act 2015 and share the United Kingdom’s expertise and best practices in identifying, investigating and disrupting acts of modern slavery.

Modern slavery is a crime that ranks among the worst forms of human rights abuse, depriving victims of the most basic fundamental rights and freedoms to which everyone is entitled. Victims could be trafficked for spare parts – organs extracted for their purchaser. Further, children were abducted from their families, made to suffer sexual abuse and robbed of any chance of a normal childhood, he said.

Pennant said modern slavery was a global phenomenon that knew no geographical boundaries, crossing not just borders but also spread through the internet. Therefore, a radical domestic and international approach was needed to target every aspect of this despicable trade and strip slave drivers of the profit they made out of human suffering by putting them behind bars, he said.

“We are already working closely with the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs of Việt Nam. I highly appreciate the efforts of our counterparts, over the years, to battle the crime, prosecute offenders and support human trafficking victims, helping them reintegrate into the community,” he said.

The UK government welcomed the opportunity to work with the Vietnamese side, international organisations and NGOs to eradicate this most despicable crime in all its forms, Pennan said.

The five countries believed to have the highest number of victims of modern slavery are Albania, Nigeria, Romania, Việt Nam and the United Kingdom.

Major Phạm Mai Hiên from the Vietnamese Ministry of Public Security said the Vietnamese police discovered more than 2,000 cases of human trafficking from 2011 till date, involving 3,200 subjects who trafficked nearly 4,000 victims.

Human trafficking was conducted in various ways, such as illegal labour export, tourism or on the pretext of visiting relatives abroad when the victims were then sold in the third country, he said.